City Confidential

Best of Milwaukee 2012

It makes perfect sense that our readers would pick up the Shepherd at their neighborhood Pick ’n
Save—almost 200,000 Shepherd readers
shop at a Roundy’s Pick ’n Save or Metro Market. We very much appreciate your
loyalty to the paper and to this grocer. Despite the increase in competition
for grocery shoppers in Milwaukee, Pick ’n Save has continued to comfortably
dominate the local market by constantly responding to their customers’ needs in
a dynamic marketplace. (Louis Fortis)

Runners-up:

Alterra

Outpost Natural Foods

Local Activist

Will Allen

Urban Farm

Growing Power

When we first put this unknown urban pioneer on the cover of the Shepherd Express in 2005, we didn’t
realize that we were working with a national rising star. But Will Allen and
Growing Power have gone from strength to strength. Long a local hero for his
urban farm advocacy, Allen has become a national presence with his support for
Michelle Obama’s fight for better food and this year’s memoir and call to
action, The Good Food Revolution.
Allen and Growing Power also committed to building more hoop houses and
employing more workers this year, feeding a city, and empowering a new
generation that needs homegrown leadership. (Lisa Kaiser)

Local Activist Runners-up:

Sachin Chheda

Nik Kovac

Urban Farm Runners-up:

Sweet Water Organics

Young Farmers of Milwaukee

Local Character

Milverine

How much do you really want to know about Milverine? The
often-shirtless, always-intense speed pedestrian should be shrouded in a cloak
of mystery. So you won’t hear from us that, according to a myth-busting AP
report, John Hamann is a construction worker who is training to be a cage fighter
and doesn’t give a rip about his fame. You can check out the Facebook page
devoted to Milverine sightings or you could just wait a few moments until he
passes you on the street. Because he will. (L.K.)

Runners-up:

Religious station wagon guy

Bob Uecker and Freeway (tie)

Local Entrepreneurs

Ward and Lincoln Fowler (Alterra co-founders)

Now in their second decade of business, Alterra Coffee Roasters’ Ward
and Lincoln Fowler (along with Paul Miller) have built something of an empire.
Alterra emphasizes high-quality ingredients, innovative re-use of materials and
spaces, and environmentally sustainable practices. The homegrown coffee and
café chain can be found in most parts of the metro Milwaukee area, from its
storefront café in Grafton to its kiosk in the airport, to its newest location
in the heart of Bay View’s commercial district. (L.K.)

Runners-up:

Jess Stern and Bartolotta family (tie)

Milwaukee Alderman

Nik Kovac

In his fairly short time in office, Nik Kovac has impressed Shepherd readers with his community
involvement and commitment to progressive goals such as sustainable
neighborhoods, greenspace, urban farming and Milwaukee Public Schools. Often
teaming with his former Riverside High classmate and current colleague,
Alderwoman Milele Coggs, Kovac genuinely cares about making Milwaukee a better
place, no matter what challenges face us. (L.K.)

Runners-up:

Bob Donovan

Michael Murphy

Milwaukee County Supervisor

Marina Dimitrijevic

Milwaukee County Board Chair Marina Dimitrijevic is one of the most
powerful people in Milwaukee County—and we still don’t believe that she has
reached the pinnacle of her career. Nor will she back down from a fight. The
Bay View supervisor has defended the board from unwarranted attacks from County
Executive Chris Abele, a man who has managed to turn many of his early
supporters into foes. But she’s a peacemaker, too. Dimitrijevic launched
monthly “chats with the chair” in the county’s 19 municipalities to build
bridges with suburbanites, and she continues to build a case for a green county
crisscrossed by a thriving bus system. (L.K.)

Runners-up:

Steve Taylor

Russell Stamper II

Milwaukeean of the Year

Most Trusted Public Official

Tom Barrett

OK, so Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett didn’t become governor in the June
recall election. But he’s still working to make Milwaukee a better place and
he’s still one of the nicest guys you’d ever meet. His streetcar plan may
attract controversy—and the ire of the Koch-brothers-backed Americans for
Prosperity—but the plan has worked well to create new jobs and businesses in
other major cities. In addition, Barrett’s attempt to make Waukesha ask for a
reasonable amount of Lake Michigan water will prove to be the right fight in
the long run. Barrett’s hand in transforming Milwaukee into a green city also
deserves high praise. (L.K.)

Milwaukeean of the Year
Runners-up:

Will Allen

Milverine

Most Trusted Public Official
Runners-up:

Scott Walker

MPD Chief Edward Flynn and Sheriff David Clarke (tie)

Most Beloved Politician

Most Despised Politician

Scott Walker

The fact that Scott Walker won both the Most Beloved and Most Despised
Politician reflects the polarized political world we currently live in. It also
reflects the broad spectrum of the Shepherd
Express readership. For example, there are actually more independents and
Republicans combined than Democrats that read the Shepherd, according to Media Audit. Scott Walker won his
governorship in 2010, a wave election fueled by the tea party extremists. But
he also won in a recall election more than a year later in a stand-alone
election. At the same time that Walker won these two elections, he had also
generated more anger and hatred toward himself than any elected official in
Wisconsin in well over a generation. As usual, Shepherd readers are spot-on in showing this dichotomy. (L.F.)

Despised Politician
Runners-up:

Tom Barrett

Paul Ryan

Beloved Politician
Runners-up:

Tom Barrett

Russ Feingold

Neighborhood to Live In

Bay View

What’s not to love? The near south shore neighborhood boasts tree-lined
streets, a long lakeshore bike and hike trail, plentiful parks and unique shops
and homes. It seems that each month brings a new restaurant and more
entertainment choices—all of them in keeping with Bay View’s quirky charms.
There’s a reason why most Bay Viewers like to stay within the neighborhood
rather than scour the rest of the city for fun. There’s no need. It’s all
there. (L.K.)

Runners-up:

East Side

Riverwest

Rising Star in Politics

Paul Ryan

You can totally disagree with his Ayn Rand view of the world and the
savage cuts to our social safety net that he proposed in his budget—cuts so
deep that even many Republicans ran the other way—but you can’t deny that Paul
Ryan ended up on the national ticket for one of the two major political
parties. So when you define “rising star in politics,” you won’t find many
rising higher than he just did in the last election cycle. However, as the
campaign went on, many people who voted for Ryan for years were a little taken
aback as they learned about some of his positions, such as wanting to prevent a
woman from having an abortion even if she is a victim of
rape or incest. (L.F.)

Runners-up:

Scott Walker

Chris Larson

State Legislator

Chris Larson

Chris Larson had a notable entry into state politics. From his position
as a county supervisor, Larson wiped out longtime state Sen. Jeff Plale in the
2010 Democratic Party primary, then became one of the “Fab 14” when he and his
fellow Democratic senators fled to Illinois in an attempt to slow down—and hopefully
negotiate a way out of—Walker’s extreme collective bargaining bill. Although
Republicans wouldn’t let any Democratic bills get time on the Senate floor when
they had control of that chamber recently, and who knows how they’ll act going
forward, expect Larson to find ways to promote Milwaukee, public
transportation, public schools, the environment and clean government. (L.K.)

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Poll

Scott Walker has proposed virtually eliminating the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. If passed, do you believe that Walker’s proposal would directly or indirectly impact the health of you or your children?